A method of printing with a printing system comprising an array of print heads, the array of print heads including a redundant print head, and a service station, includes, with the redundant print head located at the service station, printing using a remainder of the array of print heads; and positionally and functionally replacing a second print head in the array with the redundant print head while printing continues.
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10. A method of printing with a printing system comprising an array of print heads, said array of print heads including a redundant print head, and a service station, said method comprising:
with the redundant print head located at the service station, printing using a remainder of the array of print heads; and
positionally and functionally replacing a second print head in the array with the redundant print head while printing continues.
1. A method for printing in an ink jet printer system having a page-wide array of print heads including a redundant print head, comprising:
moving the redundant print head to a service station;
printing using the remainder of the page-wide array while the redundant print head is at the service station; and
positionally and functionally interchanging the redundant print head for a new print head of the page-wide array while printing continues.
2. A method in accordance with
3. A method in accordance with
redesignating the new print head as the redundant print head; and repeating said interchanging until all print heads of the page-wide array have been moved to the service station.
4. A method in accordance with
moving the redundant print head to a discrete position in the page-wide array that is occupied by the new print head; and
transferring data from the new print head to the redundant print head, so that the redundant print head operationally takes the place of the new print head without substantially interrupting printing.
5. A method in accordance with
6. A method in accordance with
laterally transferring the redundant print head along a carriage device from the service station to the discrete position; and
verifying an accuracy of positioning of the redundant print head at the discrete position using an optical encoder system associated with the carriage device.
7. A method in accordance with
redesignating the new print head as the redundant print head; and
repeating said interchanging until all print heads of the page-wide array have been serviced.
8. A method in accordance with
9. A method in accordance with
11. A method in accordance with
moving the redundant print head to a discrete position in the array that is occupied by the second print head; and
transferring data from the second print head to the redundant print head, so that the redundant print head operationally takes the place of the second print head without substantially interrupting printing.
12. A method in accordance with
laterally transferring the redundant print head along a carriage device from the service station to the discrete position; and
verifying an accuracy of positioning of the redundant print head at the discrete position using an optical encoder system associated with the carriage device.
13. A method in accordance with
14. A method in accordance with
when the redundant print head is in place in the array, redesignating the second head as the redundant print head; and
servicing the redesignated second print head at the service station.
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The present application is a divisional and claims priority under 35 U.S.C. 120 of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/906,687, filed Oct. 3, 2007, and entitled, “SYSTEM AND METHOD FOR PRINT HEAD MAINTENANCE DURING CONTINUOUS PRINTING,” now U.S. Pat. No. 8,172,359 which is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.
This disclosure relates to ink jet printing systems (whether drum-type, web-type, or cut sheet printers, for example) that use a page-wide array of print heads. A page-wide array typically includes multiple ink jet print heads positioned at fixed locations across the width of a print zone. Each print head is operated to eject ink to print desired indicia upon the portion of the print media that passes below it.
In order to maintain good image quality, drop-on-demand inkjet print heads require maintenance operations (spitting, wiping, priming, etc.) to maintain optimum print quality during long print jobs. An improperly maintained print head can become clogged and/or become the source of dot placement errors that reduce print quality. However, one challenge associated with ink jet printing systems having a page-wide array of print heads is servicing the print heads while causing a minimum of down time for the printer system. Printing can be periodically shut down to service the print heads, but this approach is reduces the time during which the printer is operational.
Various features and advantages of the present disclosure will be apparent from the detailed description which follows, taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings, which together illustrate, by way of example, features of the present disclosure, and wherein:
Reference will now be made to exemplary embodiments illustrated in the drawings, and specific language will be used herein to describe the same. It will nevertheless be understood that no limitation of the scope of the present disclosure is thereby intended. Alterations and further modifications of the features illustrated herein, and additional applications of the principles illustrated herein, which would occur to one skilled in the relevant art and having possession of this disclosure, are to be considered within the scope of this disclosure.
The present disclosure relates generally to servicing of ink jet print heads in ink jet printers that use a page-wide array of print heads. Such printers can include drum-type, web-type, and cut sheet printers, for example. In a drum-type printer, for example, a page-wide array of print heads can be positioned over a rotating drum, which rotates and carries pages of print media past the print head. The print media can occupy a print zone on the drum, and each print head can be positioned to eject ink drops within a discrete region of the print zone as the media passes by. Drum-type and other ink jet printers can be configured to print onto the print media in one or more passes, and in one direction or bidirectionally (e.g. printing can occur with the drum rotating clockwise and then counterclockwise in one or more sequences).
The number of print heads can vary. A schematic diagram of one embodiment of a page-wide array 40 is provided in
As noted above, in order to maintain good image quality, proper maintenance of the condition of the print heads is desirable. An improperly maintained print head can become clogged and/or become the source of dot placement errors that reduce print quality. Accordingly, drop-on-demand inkjet print heads perform maintenance operations (e.g. spitting, wiping, priming, etc.) to maintain optimum print quality during long print jobs. Offline drop detection can also be used to determine if nozzles require additional servicing or to provide data for nozzle replacement algorithms.
Unfortunately, performing proper maintenance of ink jet print heads without interrupting the printing process presents a significant challenge. One approach that has been used for print head maintenance is to periodically shut down printing, service the print heads, and then start printing again. This approach is inefficient and reduces the printer's operational time. Another approach that has been tried with a page-wide array is to have two fully redundant page wide arrays of print heads so that one array can be serviced while the other array is used for printing. Unfortunately, this approach is wasteful and expensive because it doubles the required number of print heads.
To allow for print head servicing operations during continuous printing, the inventors have developed a page-wide array that is partially redundant, having one or more redundant print heads. This allows multiple print heads in the page-wide array to be printing images, while the one or more redundant print heads are undergoing servicing routines.
Shown in
A print head service station 46 usually includes a waste ink collector 56, called a “spittoon”, into which a number of drops of ink can be periodically ejected, or “spit”, from each nozzle of a print head to flush out drying ink. If spitting is not performed, the first few drops ejected from each nozzle can have poor trajectory or be of low optical density, potentially resulting in visible image or print quality defects. The service station can also include a priming and wiping assembly, which can include a rotating drum 60 that includes a primer application pad 62 and a wiper 64. The primer application pad is configured to rotate down toward a primer reservoir 66 to contact liquid primer (which is essentially ink solvent) held in the reservoir, and then rotate up to wipe the solvent onto the orifice plate of 52 of the print head that is located at the service station. This wiping action helps to dissolve accumulated ink residue from the orifice plate. The drum can then rotate to cause the wiper to wipe across the orifice plate to remove the solvent and dissolved ink and other contaminants. The service station can also include a cap 68 that can be closed over the print head after servicing, to further reduce the likelihood that the ink jet nozzles will dry out.
As noted above, the individual print heads 42 are each mounted on a carriage rod 54, which provides a lateral transfer device that allows the print heads to be independently moved from the print zone 44 to the service station as needed. While the details of the mechanism that moves the print heads along the carriage rods is not shown in the figures, this type of mechanism is well known to those of skill in the art. The print heads are also each interconnected to a controller 70, which controls the flow of data and other commands to the print heads. The page-wide array can also include an encoder system, including an encoder strip or rod 72 that is associated with each print head in
The embodiment of
After servicing of print head 42e is complete (or following some specified time interval thereafter), this redundant print head can be moved from the service station 46 back to the print zone 44, to take a position in one of the print column positions (Cols. 1-4). In the present example, the controller 70 recognizes print head 42e as the redundant print head that has recently been serviced, and identifies print head 42b as the next print head to be serviced. Accordingly, the controller causes print head 42e to be moved from the service station to the position of the new print head to be serviced—i.e. Col. 2, the position of print head 42b. This condition is shown in
At this point the printing system undertakes a changeover routine to allow the redundant print head (42e) to be functionally exchanged with the new print head to be serviced (42b), making that new print head the redundant print head. At the beginning of the changeover operation, print heads 42b and 42e are both in the second from the left position (Col. 2) of the page-wide array, as shown in
Once the data that was flowing to print head 42b has been rerouted to print head 42e, print head 42b becomes the redundant print head, and can be moved from the print zone 44 to the service station 46 to undergo servicing. This condition is shown in
The process that has been discussed above is outlined in
At this point the new print head becomes the redundant print head, and can be moved to the service station for servicing (step 112). Steps 108-112 together can be viewed as representing the process of positionally and functionally interchanging the redundant print head for a new print head of the page-wide array. After the new print head has been serviced, the system can immediately repeat the process to exchange that print head for another in the array, or the system can wait a time interval (step 102) before proceeding. Advantageously, all of the steps in this method can take place while continuously printing using multiple print heads in the page-wide array.
The invention thus provides a system and method for servicing ink jet print heads during continuous printing, and applies to drum-type, web-type, or cut sheet printers. It provides an ink jet printer system having a plurality of print heads, including at least one redundant print head. Each print head is positionally and functionally interchangeable between a plurality of discrete positions of a page-wide array using a lateral transfer device or carriage, and is also independently moveable between the service station and the plurality of discrete positions, to allow continuous printing during servicing of the redundant print head. This provides page-wide printer architecture that enables continuous printing while servicing any one of multiple print heads. The lateral transfer device can include an encoder system configured to ensure substantially accurate repositioning of each print head at each of the discrete positions in the page-wide array after servicing, so that print quality is not affected by inaccurate print head positioning. While the lateral transfer device is depicted herein as a carriage system, other types of systems for positionally interchanging the redundant portion of the array with part of the non-redundant portion of the array can be used.
While the examples illustrated and discussed above relate to a page-wide array having four active print heads and one redundant print head, these numbers are only exemplary. Additionally, while the embodiments discussed above include only one service station and only one print head on each print head carriage rod, multiple service stations can be provided, and multiple print heads can be associated with a single carriage rod. Moreover, the system can include print bars having multiple print heads, and more than one such print bar can be attached to a given carriage rod.
One example of an alternative embodiment of a partially redundant page-wide array is given in
The configuration of
Additionally, while any print head in the system of
It will be apparent that the system shown in
To provide a more compact system, multiple print heads can be associated with a single print bar that is attached to each carriage rod, and multiple print bars can be associated with a single carriage rod. Such a system is shown in
The provision of six print bars 304 in a page-wide array that requires four print bars to cover the full page width provides a partially redundant array, allowing up to two of the six print bars to be serviced at any given time, and then functionally and positionally interchanged with the other print bars during continuous printing. As shown in the figure, print bar 304f is positioned at the right service station 310. As with the system depicted in
The page-wide array shown in
Another embodiment of a partially redundant page-wide array is shown in
Unlike the embodiment of
Another embodiment of a partially redundant multi-pass page-wide array is shown in
The system and method disclosed herein contemplates a partially redundant page-wide array. That is, the number of redundant print heads or print bars is less than the number of active print heads or print bars (e.g. an array having just two active print heads or print bars would have only one redundant print head or print bar). When maintenance is complete on the at least one redundant print head or print bar, the recently serviced print head or print bar can replace one of the other print heads or print bars in the array, which can then undergo a maintenance routine. This approach allows a page-wide array to print continuously with the non-redundant portion of the array, while still conducting periodic print head maintenance operations. Instead of duplicating the entire page-wide array, one or more redundant print heads or print bars are used to achieve the same functionality with less cost and complexity.
This system and method also provides an additional aspect of functionality beyond the servicing of print heads. Specifically, the redundant print head(s) can also be used for printing activities when not being serviced. This allows printing to proceed using both the redundant print head and the remainder of the page-wide array before positionally and functionally interchanging the redundant print head for the new print head. For example, a redundant print head can be actuated to “cover” for another print head that has some weak nozzles. That is, the redundant print head can be moved to a printing position (i.e. a column in the page-wide array) that is occupied by the print head with weak nozzles, and caused to print in that column to make up for the poorly performing print head. This can be done in at least two ways. In one approach, the redundant print head is caused to print the data that the poorly performing print head would otherwise print. Alternatively, both the redundant print head and the poorly performing print head can be used at the same time, with print data shifted from one to the other. For example, if the system cannot fully recover 2 heads, part of one print head (e.g. the poorly performing print head) can be used for most data, and the missing areas can be filled in by positioning the redundant print head behind the poor region of the other.
Redundant print heads can also be used to improve print quality generally, such as to speed up multi-pass printing. For example, a 3-pass printing process can be sped up by ⅓ by using one or more redundant print heads to provide the same result in 2 print passes. In the first pass through the print array the redundant print head(s) can provide an additional ink application on part of the media, and then be shifted to provide an additional ink application on the remainder of the media in the second pass. This provides each part of the print media with three printing applications in only two passes. It is to be appreciated that this sort of approach can be used in a variety of different ways and with printing systems having different numbers of print heads or print bars and of redundant print heads or print bars.
Yet another characteristic of this system is that defective print heads can be replaced and calibrated without stopping the print engine. Specifically, the controller (70 in
Additionally, while the discussion presented above refers to a service station having spitting, priming and wiping devices for automatically servicing one or more print heads, these functions could also be performed manually. For example, the service station can simply be a position to which a print head or print bar can be moved to allow an operator to prime and wipe the print heads by hand, and possibly perform other operations.
It is to be understood that the above-referenced arrangements are illustrative of the application of the principles disclosed herein. It will be apparent to those of ordinary skill in the art that numerous modifications can be made without departing from the principles and concepts of this disclosure, as set forth in the claims.
Askeland, Ronald A, Osborne, William S, Sabo, Thomas M
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